DOCUMENT RESUME
ED 246 415 CS 208 112
AUTHOR Bliss, Carolyn
TITLE Writing as Action: Using Speech Act Theory in the
Composition Classroom.
PUB DATE Oct 83
NOTE 37p.; Paper presented at the Annual Fill Conference
of the Virginia Association of Teachers of English
(14th, Arlington, VA, October 7-9, 1983).
PUB TYPE Speeches/Conference Papers (150) -- Guides -
Classroom Use - Guides (For Teachers) (052)
EDRS PRICE MF01/PCO2 Plus Postage.
DESCRIPTORS Higher Education; *Language Usage; Learning Theories;
Persuasive Discourse; Rhetoric; *Speech Acts; *Speech
Communication; *Student Teacher Relationship; Writing
Improvement; *Writing Instruction
IDENTIFIERS *Jargon
ABSTRACT
Speech act theory jargon has several advantages over
the traditional composition jargon. First, it is new and therefore
potentially exciting. Its newness means that all students have an
equal chance at it and need not feel that because they failed to
understand a term presented in high school, that notion is forever
lost to them. Second, jargon is fun. It,creates an in-group of the
informed, a comfortable place to be, especially for a student writer.
A final advantage is that speech act theory terms can be clearly
defined and demonstrated in ways the student understands. Speech act
theory begins to systemize the exploration of the rhetorical
transaction between speaker and hearer; it makes this transaction
more intelligble and, t:erefore, more teachable. (CRN)
***************************************************0*******************
* Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made *
* from the original document. *
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WRITING AS ACTION:
.
*USING SPEECH ACT THEORY IN THE COMPOSITION CLASSROOM
A paper presented at the
Fourteenth Annual Fall Conference of the Virginia Association
of Teachers of English
("NJ Arlington, Virginia, October 7-9, 1983
C.M
Li
Carolyn Bliss
Radford University
Mere was a,joke making the rounds at Radford University last year,
one of those jokes which depend for their humor on dramatizing dunderheade,a
helplessness. The joke goes like this: "Did you hear about the guy who
locked his keys in his car? Took him five hours to pry the car open and
get the rest of his family out." The student who told me this joke was
especi,ally amused by the mental image it evoked for him. "Can't you just
see them?" he chuckled, "the wife and kids pounding On the windows and
screaming to get out?"
Certainly, slIch helplessness is funny, but sore of its analogues are
less amusing. In fact, I think the very student who told this story was
caught in a similar dilemma. Like the wife and the kids in the story, that
is, he had what Chomsky called the competence he needed to complete the
task at hand. He had only to open the door. But something about the
situation he was in, something frightening or alienating, impeded that
competence, blocking its emergence as performance. As teachers of writing,
we could all report experiences paralleling that of Rcbert Zoellner:
"PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE THIS
MATERIAL HAS BEEN GRANTED BY
Carolyn Bliss
ti
TO THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES
INFORMATION CENTER (ERIC)."
2
The most compelling and suggestive office interview
"happening" occurs when I read the student's utterly
opaque and impenetrable sentence or paragraph aloud
to him. "Mr. Phillips," I say, "I simply can't make head
nor tails out of this paragraph; what in the world were
you trying to say?" When I pose this question in this
situation, large numbers of students, certainly a majority,
respond with a bit of behavior which I suggest may be of
immense significance for the teaching of composition. They
open their mouths and they say the thing they were unable
to write. "Well, Dr. Zoellner," they usually begin, "all
I meant to say in-that paragraph was that . . .," and out
it comes, a sustained, articulated, rapid-fire segment of
sound-stream," usually from five to fifteen seconds duration,
which communicates to me effectively and quickly what they
"had in mind" when they produced the impenetrable paragraph
I hold in my hand. And all I had to do to elicit this
fascinating bit of behavior was to ask them to shift from
1
the scribal modality to the vocal modality.
As Ross Winterowd and Dan Slobin have argued, our students do have a
thoroughgoing understanding or their native tongue and the potential to
2
use it effectively. "The task of the 1:nguage teacher," says Winterowd,
"is to activate basic compete4nce so that it alTears in the arena of
performance." 3
Of course, not everyone agrees either that student writers possess
this theoretical global competdnce or that encouraging what Zoellner calls
4
a "vocal-scribal reweld" can help to activate it. James Collins, for
example, has found that a relatively greater reliance on habits developed
from the use of spoken language is evident in the work of weak and
unskilled writers; and John C. Shafer cautions us that written texts,
which are normally structured as monologues, make far greater demands than
6
do the collaboratively produced dialogues of spoken discourse. Yet
Shafer, too, concludes "that a particular kind of oral language trans-
ference can help, not hurt, writing. Most students would write better if
they channeled some of the liveliness that characterizes their conversation
into their papers."7
My argument here will be that an understanding of speech act theory
and the classroom use of some of its concepts might dig the channels
Shafer hopes for between a student's vocal precision and scribal opacity.
Speech act theory has this potential because it conceives of writing and
speaking as different, but not different in kind. For speech act theorists,
the production of language in any mode is an act, or in other words, to say
is always to do.
To locate the theory, we might adopt the distinctions of Carnap and
Morris between syntactics, which studies the relationship among signs;.
semantics, whose field is the relationship of signifier to signified; and
8
pragmatics, whose fDcus is on signs as they relate to users. Within this
schema, the fr, ,ry's emphasis on speeCh as action and its corollary concern
with language in action places it squarely in the domain of pragmatics,
the linguistic domain inhabited by most of our students. Speech act
theory is concerned with what Dell Hymes has called "communicative
competence": the ability to use language purposefully and context-
9
sensitively to accomplish-the job of communicating.
4
It arse in the 1960's largely out of the work of the philosopher
10
J. L. Austin and its development by John Searle. The work of H. P. ,Grice,
especially on implicature and the Cooperative Principle in conversation,
is also acknowledged by many speech act theorists, and for good reason.
Grice defines meaning in terms of the intention to use an utterance to
produce an effect on an audience. This concept of meaning allows a shift
from concern with sentences in isolation to concern with discourse in
context, a context which includes a speaker's purpose and intentions and
11
the impact of his speech acts.
Such a shift is implicit in the very inception of speech act theory,
whose starting point is a dissatisfaction with philosophy's traditional
approach to the sentence: one which took as standard a declarative statement
of fact, viewed it as independent of the context of other sentences, and
concentrated on identifying and describing its truth conditions -- those
circumstances which would render the sentence either true or false. In
his 1955 William James lectures at Harvard, posthumously published in 1962
as the bock How to Do Things with Words, J. L. Austin hypothesized a
quite different class of utterances: those which actually accomplish an
action rather than describing or reporting that action or anything else,
and which consequently cannot be judged as true or false. He assumed that
this lass,'which he dubbed "performatives" (p. 6), could be usefully
contrasted to the class of describers and reporters, or as Austin preferred
to call them, "constatives" (p. 3).
He first noticed that to utter a performative is to perform the action
it names. Thus to say, "I christen thee John," is to christen him John;
to say, "I bet you five dollars the Yankees will win," is to bet five
5
dollars on the matter; and to say, "I promise you I'll go," is to make
that promise. On the other hand, to utter the constative, "He's here,"
seems to be performing no, action at all, but merely to be reporting a
state of affairs.
Austin began, tben, by suggesting a performative / constative
dichotomy in speech. But by tackling the vast grey areas of "half pui40
performatives like "I blame," wnich seem both to do and to describe (p. 79),
and by refusing, as he put it, "to bog, by logical stages, down" (p. 13),
Austin came eventually to the realization that to say is always to do, or,
in other words, that'all speech is performative. Once this proposition is
accepted, it becomes possible to analyze just what a speaker does when he
says something. Austin and John Searle after him have decided that he
normally does several things, that is, performs several related acts.
First, he produces an utterance which makes sense in terms of the
vocabulary and syntax of the language being used. This is Austin's
"locutionary act" (p. 94) and results in a meaningful utterance, one with
"sense and reference." In Searle's terms, this production actually results
from two acts: the "utterance act" which generates "words (morphemes,
sentences)" and the "propositional act" which adds to these the dimensions
of reference and predication (Speech Acts, p. 24). As Martin Steinmann,
Jr. points out, this distinction between utterance and propositional acts
is necessary to disqualify as a propositional act a statement which refers
to something. nonexistent, for example, the statement, "My uncle loves the
blonde next door;" made by someone who has no uncle and whose next door
12
neighbor is a redhead. However, for either Austin or Searle, an example
of these acts would be the production, in appropriate circumstances, of the
6
sentence: "Mary was present." By issuing this utte-ance, the speaker
is performing the locutionary or utterance and propositional acts of
referring to Mary and predicating that she was present.
Normally, and perhaps inescapably, to perform such acts is also to
indicate or imply how they are to be taken by the hearer. Is the speaker's
utterance to be understood, for example, as a question, command, statement,
description, argument, cr expression of belief, desire, or decision? When
the speaker indicates or implies which one or several of these possibilities
best reflect his intentions in producing the utterance, he is adding to his
words the dimension which both Austin and Searle call "illocutionary
force" and thereby performing the second or "illocutionary act" (Austin,
pp. 98-100; Searle, Speech Acts, pp. 22-30).
Illocutionary fOrce may be specified by the use of what Searle calls
"illocutionary force indicating devices" (Speech Acts, p. 30), and Austin
terms "explicit performatives" (pp. 64-66). Examples are: "I argue,"
"I request," "I promise," and "I apologize." When they appear, these
devices are normally prefixed to the propositional content of the utterance
(Speech Acts, p. 30). For example, when I say, "I promise I'll be there,"
I have specified that the propositional content of my utterance ( "I'll be
there") is to be taken as having the illocutionary force of a promise. But
in an utterance like "Mary was present," the illocutionary force is implied
rather than explicit. The force here should be taken as that of a statement,
unless some other indication of illocutionary force is given, for example,
"I argue that Mary was present," "I deny that Mary was present," or even,
"I bet that Mary was present" (Austin, pp. 134-35).
On what basis do we infer illocutionary force when no verbal indicator
is present? For Searle:
7
Illocutionary force indicating devices in English include
at least; word order, stress, intonation, contour, punctuation,
6nd/the mood of the verb 25; well ail the so-called performa-
tive verbs . Often in actual speech situations, the context
will make it clear what the illocutionary force of the utterance
is, without its being necessaryto invoke, the appropriate
explicit illocutionary force indicator.
(Speech Acts, p. 30)
Thus, for example, if a student asks a professor to do something, we can be
fairly certain that the student's utterance has the illocutionary force of
a request as opposed to a command, since the context makes the former more
appropriate.
Sometimes, and again as a result of the impact of context, illocutionary
force may inhere in a single word. Take, for example) forms of. address.
13
Drawing on Roger Brown and Marguerite Ford , Elizabeth Cross Traugott and
Mary Louise Pratt in Linguistics for Students of Literature cite the
varying effects of addressing a man named Henry Jones as "sir, Mr. Jones,
Jones, Henry, Hank, Pinky, boy, meathead, sweetheart, or dad" (pp. 226-27).
. .
I will use their example to make a slightly different point.' The illocu-
tionary force of forms like "sir" or "Mr. Jones" establishes and is
appropriate to a relationshi.) of inferior to superior or a cool relation-
ship between colleagues. The reverse relationship, that of superior to
inferior, is suggested by the illocutionary force of "boy" and perhaps
"Hank" and "Henry," while "Jones," "Henry" or "Hank" might all be used by
peers. Increasing degrees of intimacy and fondness are suggested by "Henry,"
"Hank," and "Pinky," whereas "meathead" implies contempt. The use of "dad"
or "sweetheart" suggests a certain social or familial relationship. As
context changes, forms of address and their concommitant illocutionary
force will change as well, even when the same two interlocutors are speaking.
In private or among colleagues, I address as "Earl" the professor who shares
my office, but when students are present, he is "Dr. Brown." Moreover,
even the same form of address can shift its illocutionary force as
circumstances dictate. As Traugott and Pratt put it, "The simple form
Jones could be used, among other things, to greet Jones, to get him to pay
attention, to warn him of danger, to order him to stop doing something,
or :'r) express surprise at something he just did" (p. 227). In other words,
this single word could be used to perform the illocutionary acts of
greeting,.calling for attention, warning, commanding, or expressing a
psychological state in the speaker/writer.
Thus illocutionary force is a slippery and highly context-dependent
aspect of the overall speech act. Nontheless, taxonomies of illocutionary
acts are usually attempted on the basis of illocutionary force. I have
found it most useful to draw from both Austin and Searle here, as do
Traugott and Pratt, and to offer their taxonomy as an example. It posits
the following categories of illocutionary acts:
Representatives commit the speaker to the belief that something was,
is, or will be the case. These utterances express a beli,2f in the truth
of the propositional content. Examples are "Mary was there"; "It's raining";
4,4,1
and "John Glenn will be the next Democratic,candidate for President."
Directives attempt to get the hearer/reader to do something. They
express, with varying degrees of force, the desire that something happen.
Examples are the imperative, "Open the window!" and the gentler "Would you
please open the window?" Because they seek the response of an answer,
most questions are directives.
Whereas directives try to direct the acts of others, commissives
commit the speaker/writer to a course of action. Like "I promise I'll
come," they express an intention on the speaker's part to do something.
Expressives, on the other hand, express nothing but a psychological
state in the speaker/writer. The truth of the existence of this state
is not susceptible to proof. When I say, for example, "Congratulations
on winning the race," or "I'm sorry I stepped on your toe," you have no
way of authenticating my sincerity.
In the case of declarations, a truth assessment is also useless,
because these are speech acts which make truth. That is, they bring about
a correspondence between their propositional content and reality by
creating the state of affairs they declare. Because they use language to
make something happen, and because here, the saying is undoubtedly the
doing, these are the purest examples of performatives. Sample declarations
include "I christen thee John"; "I now pronounce you man and wife"; and
"You're fired!"
A related category is the verdictive which delivers a verdict
regarding fact or value. Verdictives like "He's a nice guy" or "Bach is
better than Beethoven" display the verdictive's tendency to rank or assess.
A final sort of illocutionary act deserving mention is not itself"a
type, but rather is named for its use, a use to which any other type might
conceivably be put. This is the indirect, or what I call the double-decker
14
illocution, one which does one thing by way of another. In the literature,
the most often cited example is "Could you pass the salt?" While this
10
about ability,
illocution has the direct illocutionary force of a question
request
it has the much more important indirect illocutionary force of a
to do something. Few of us, after all, are truly doubtful that our
addressee has the physical strength, visual acuity, moral stamina, or
whatever to pick up and pass a salt shaker. Nonetheless, there are
circumstances in which this question might function as the vehicle of its
direct illocutionary force. It would, for example, be a legitimate,
An
although highly insensitive, question to ask of a quardripiegic.
in the
illocution might also function both directly and indirectly, as
to open the door of
case of "Could you open the aoor?" asked as a request
cast. Thus, attention to
a person whose broken leg has just come our of a
distinguishing
the entire communicative context becomes imperative when
the
indirect from direct speech acts, as it also is when determining
Assessment of the speech act
illocutionary force of any illocution.
to lessen the
situation in its widest possible sense is the only way
is prone.
ambiguity to which illocutionary force determination
Is "We find the
Further ambiguities invade the taxonomy proper.
It certainly delivers
defendant not guilty" a Nierdictive or a declaration?
something happen: because of
a finding, but at the same time, it makes
And what of such illocutions as
this s,Deech act a defendant is acquitted.
liveth." Like
"I hope she'll be there" or "I know that my Redeemer
something being the case,
representatives, these acts commit the speaker to
unverifiable, they would also
but since the hope and the knowledge are
seem.to be expressives. OtherexampleS of taxonomic crossover will spring
then,
readily to mind. The purpose of presenting this classification,
11
is less to assure you that every illocution will fit neatly into one of
its cascegories than to provide an indication of the range and uses of
illocutionary force.
"Use" is the key term here. For all these illocutions are designed
for use, that is, to have some pragmatic impact or effect upon the
'.ealer/reader. The notion of impact brings us to the final dimension of
the speech act: the perlocutionary act which produces perlocutionary effect.
As will be clear by now, speech act theory focuses on the speaker/
writer's intentions; he intends his act to have a certain propositional
content, delivered with a certain illocutionary force and to be so under-
stood. If It is so understood, the speaker/writer has achieved what Austin
called "uptake" (pp. 11E-117). Suppose, for example, that I am arguing
for a Constitutional ami:..1-1:.ent outlawing abortion. Once you understand
that the propositional content of my utterances is: "a Cons:itutional
amendment banning abortion should be passed," and you understand that my
utterances have the illocutionary force of argument, uptake has been
achieved. I iday argue all day and you may understand both what I am arguing
and that I am arguing, and yet remain unconvinced. Your continued
skepticism, or worse, does not undermine uptake.
According to Austin, uptake must be secured if the illocutionary act
Yet even this can pose problems. Not
is to be successfully accomplished.
only must the speaker/writer clarify propositional content, but he must
be sensitive to his audience's need to know. How much information does
his hearer/reader have already? How much and what kind of information
does he need to "take up" the speaker/writer's point? What kind of diction
and syntax will facilitate this uptake? The Gricean Cooperative Principle
It
of conversation can be seen as a st,2ategy for maximizing uptake.
12
dictates, among other things, that contributions to the conversation must
avoid obscurity and ambiguity, be relevant, and be neither insufficiently
15
nor overly informative.
Now let's suppose that I have cooperated in the Griceaa sense and
have also been so persuasive that you not only take up my argument but are
convinced by it. You enlist yourself under my banner. In this case, I
have performed an additional, perlocutionary act and my utterances have
had their intended perlocutionary effect. As examples of perlocutionary
effects, Austin lists "convincing, persuading, deterring, and even . .
surprising or misleading" (p. 109). Perlocutionary acts are those we do
ky. saying something, whereas illocutionary acts are those performed in
saying something. Where illocutionary force is determined by communicative
purpose, perlocutionary effectiveness is determined by fulfillment of that
purpose.
Perlocutionary effectiveness demands attention to another sort of
audience needs and employment of techniques classically marshaled under
the rhetoric rubric. To effect perlocutionary purpose, the speaker/writer
must consider which rhetorical strategies are most likely to work on his
audience. Are his reader/hearers already with him or against him? What
arguments will bear most weight with either camp? What tone and diction
should he adopt and/or avoid? Of the things he might say, what will be
most convincing, least offensive?
Like illocutionary force, both uptake and perlocutionary effect are
influenced by context, that is, by the entire discourse situation. If
I am drunk, or half asleep, your careful discussion of Kantian ethics may
fail to get uptake, and if you are wearing a "Pro-Choice" button, I may
13
despair of achieving the intended perlocuti'mary effect of my argument
for an anti-abortion amendment. Surely among the most valuable contributions
speech act theory can make to our understanding of language and its use
is its emphasis on context and on audience needs as part of that context.
As Austin insists, "The total speech act in the total speech situation
is the only actual pheromenon which, in the last resort, we are engaged
in elucidating" (p. 148).
Aspects of speech act context, many of them extra-linguistic, play a
major role in the tests employed by both Austin and Searle to determine
"That Searle calls the appropriateness and Austin the "felicity" or
"happiness" of a given illocutionary act (Austin, p. 14). Searle has
hypothesized sets of appropriateness conditions for a number of
illocutionary acts, but because Austin's felicity conditions are less
cumbersome and more easily generalized, I will use these here as I have
in my classes. Austinian felicity conditions (see pp. 14-15) may be
roughly grouped into three categories which I have labeled: 1) context,
2) content, and 3) intentions and consequences. "Context" would of course
cover all the factors we have just been considering. Pratt and Traugott
summarize these as including "social and physical circumstances; identities,
attitudes, abilities, and beliefs of participants; and relations holding
between participants" (p. 226). Also urder this heading comes the notion
of invoking an accepted, conventional, prcedure. At 8:00 a.m., it is
inappropriate, or "infelicitous," to greet someone with the words, "Good
evening"; and at a horserace it is inappropriate to bet on a race which
is already run. It is likewise inappropriate to use the slang phrase
"hangs out with" in .a formal essay on schools of philosophy.
114
Rules in the second category dictate that the conventional procedure
invoked under category one must be executed fully and correctly. If in a
marriage ceremony the minister pauses for response and the bride says
"Waterloo" as opposed to "I do," the ceremony (and probably the marriage
itself) can be judged infelicitous. Similarly, a student who writes
garbled or fragmented sentences might be said to have violated category
two rules.
A third set of felicity conditions is akin to what Searle calls
sincerity conditions, which insist that the speaker know what he means
aal mean what he says. These are the rules which make lies infelicitous,
as well as the unconvincing, unfelt prose written by some of our students.
Breaking the rules in any of these ways will weaken perlocutionary
effect and lessen the chances of uptake, sometimes grievously. In Austin's
understanding, sins against category one and two dictates are mortal to
the speech act, voiding it entirely, while category three transgressions
are merely venial. As Austin puts it, an insincere speech act "is achieved,
although to achieve it in such circumstances . . . is an abuse of the
procedure. Thus, when I say 'I promise' and have no intention of keeping
'che promise/I have promised but . . ." (p. 16). Perhaps it is this
ability to stay morbidly alive which makes the insincere speech act more
dangerous than the unconventional, inappropriate, or incomplete one.
We can now see that speech act theory will provide us with the
concepts and terminology to address such comlon student "misfires" (again
the term is Austin's, p. 16) as lack of attention to audience needs and
communicative context, murkiness of purpose, unsuitable or uncompelling
voice, the deadening which often occurs when the student shifts from the
15
vocal to the scribal modality, the use of diction which is ineffective or
unorthodox in the given circumstances, and even a tendency toward dangling
modifiers and sentence fragments. Rut can all this potential be put into
practice? Or, to paraphrase Austin again, holl can one do things with
speech act theory, especially in the composition classroom?
Claims for speech act theory's pragmatic potential have been large
and exciting indeed. Comparing rules derived from speech act theory to
those of phrase-structure, semantics, or transformational-generative grammar,
Richard Ohmann observes that, "Where transformations and the rest explicate
a speaker's grammatical competence, the rules for speech acts explicate
his competence in using speech to act (and be acted upon) within the matrix
16
of social and verbal conventions." The domain of speech act theory is
thus larger and more inclusive than those staked out by some other
approaches. This global inclusivity is also remarked by Edward P. J. Corbett
who says:
What is particularly fruitful about 6- speech act theorj 0
method of analysis is not only that it allows the critic
/Or, I would add, the teacher] to range freely from word
to sentence to larger units of discourse but that it
allows him to unite the provinces of the linguist as he
looks at the locutionary act, the semanticist as he looks
at the illocutionary act, and the rhetorician as he looks
at the perlocutionary act. It moves us from the rather
atomistic study of isolated units of language to the
larger social,political, aesthetic, and pragmatic contexts
17
of the language.
16
Such enormous capacity has already been put to work in literary theory
and criticism. Speech act theory has been used to attempt a definition of
fiction itself, as well as to address specific literary texts and authors.
It has also been called upon to correct the new critical myopia which
viewed a text only in and of itself, and to encourage the text to be seen
as a communicative act. Pratt's well known Toward a Spef.lch Act Theory of
18
Liteary Discourse takes a long step in this direction,
In the application of speech act theory to single texts, perhaps the
most cited contribution was made by Stanley Fish in his 1976 article,
"How to Do Things with Austin and Searle: Speech Act Theory and Literary
Criticism. "19 Although Fish uses this forum in part to warn of certain
dangers incurred when the theory is applied indiscriminately, he also con-
structs a convincing analysis of Shakespeare's Coriolanus as a man who
ignores or violates the appropriateness conditions for certain speech acts,
notably those of making requeSts of others, accepting their thanks and
praise, and issuing declarations. The acts of making requests and accept-
ing praise imply 'leir performer's dependence on another's action or
judgment, and thereby put the speaker in a position Coriolanus abhors.
Avoidance of these speech acts betrays Coriolanus's arrogance and fancied
self-sufficiency, but his issuing of the unauthorized declaration is
downright subversive. When he banishes the citizens who have just banished
him, he rejects the appropriateness conditions governing the making of
declarations (since he is in no position to do this), flouts convention,
and thus challenges the very institutions on which conventions rest. On
the other hand, in the speech acts of refusing and promising, both of
which show the speaker dependent only upon himself, Coriolanus is proficient.
17
Fish's approach thus demonstrates both that performance of and preference
for certain speech acts can serve as an index to character, and that
Coriolanus's fate is infelicitous in part because some this speech acts
are. The article highlights the real-world consequences, at least as
portrayed in the play, of language in action or language withheld.
Another analysis, by Richard Ohmann, focuses not on the character's
speech acts among other characters, but on those of the author addressed
20 Since Ohmann's concerns more closely approach those we
to the reader.
have as compos5tion teachers, I will spend a bit more time on his work.
As his text, Ohmann takes the following passage from Beckett's novel Watt,
their many
a passage which lists the members of the Lynch family and
maladies:
And then to pass on to the next generation there was Tom's
boy young Simon aged twenty, whose it is painful to relate
and his young cousin wife his uncle Sam's girl Ann, aged
nineteen, whose it will be learnt with regret beauty and
utility were greatly diminished by two withered arms and
a game leg of unsuspected tubercular origin, and Sam's
two surviving boys Bill and Mat aged eighteen and seventeen
respectively, who having come into this world respectively
blind and maim were known as Blind Bill and Maim Mat
respectively, and Sam's other married daughter Kate aged
twenty-one years, a fine girl but a bleeder (1), and her young
cousin husband her uncle Jack's son Sean aged twenty-one
years, a sterling fellow but a bleeder too . .
18
(1) Haemophilia is, like-enlargement of the prostate, an
21
exclusively male disorder. But not in this vork.
To account for the discomfort and sense of dislocation this passage produces
in the reader, Ohmann begins by referring to Austin's felicity conditions.
Modifying these for strict application to the illocutionary act of
assertion, Ohmann says:
To make a statement felicitously, I must, among other
things, utter a declarative sentence . . . . I must be
the right person to make the statement . . . . I will
not get away with stating that the memory of your
grandfather just crossed your mind. I must not mumble
. . . or break off in the middle . . . . I must believe
what I say . . ., and I must not ground my future conduct
or speech in a contrary understanding of the state of the
world.22
Clearly, Beckett isn't playing by these rules. When the novel's narrator
claims that Kate is a haemophiliac and then appends a footnote denying
that she could be, he is violating either the condition of belief in his
statement or the condition that this belief shall govern subsequent speech
acts. In another kind of violation, the textual gap afler "it is painful
to relate" signals an incomplete speech act. If the gap is taken as
suggesting the narrator's ignorance, it is hard to reconcile this
ignorance with his later observation that Ann's game leg is of
"unsuspected tubercular origin." Since such a remark implies omniscience
(no one else in the story suspects this etiology), the reader is left
wondering what the narrator's position is vis a vis the story. Is he or
is he not the "right person to make . . . statements Cs] " here?
19
The narrator's speech acts in this passage are therefore void, or
at best, insincere and self-contradictory. Moreover, the second sentence
of the footnote ("But not in this work.") exacerbates the confusion by
admitting a disjunction between the fictional and 'real" worlds, thus
problematizing context to the point that the reader is unsure how to
take the utterances. As they did in Coriolanus, these rule infractions
call into question the very institutions and conventions, both social
and literary, that give rise to them. Worse still, if, as Fish and
Searle would have it, speech act rules do not merely regulate, but
actually constitute some of these institutions, such infractions may reflect
a radical rejectior of the very possibility of communication or social
3
cooperation.?
The narrator also offends against speech act rules in lesser ways.
The passage displays grammatical anomalies and unnecessarily repeats
information. Examples are the three "respectively's" and "cousin wife
his uncle Sam's girl." It also mixes levels of diction, from the formal
"it will be learnt with regret" and "greatly diminished" on the one hand,
to the colloquial "a game leg" and "a fine girl but a bleeder" on the
other. All these confuse illocutionary Force and interfere with
perlocutionary effectiveness. A syntax marked more by conjunction than
subordination causes similar problems by refusing to assess or evaluate
the information presented anti establishing instead what Ohmann calls a
narrative "neutrality." We end, says Ohmann, with a view of the narrator
and a dizzy
as demonstrating "a baffling mixture of rhetorical impulses
24
sequence of emotional responses." Surely this is not a narrator (nor.
did Beckett intend to create one) who expects much in the way of uptake
20 .
or achieved perlocutionary purposes. Nonetheless, it is precisely
the kind of narrator who best suits Beckett's perlocutionFry purposes:
to get us to experience the world as he sees it.
As the foregoing summary should suggest, speech act theory may help
us go beyond analysis of single texts toward the task of describing an
author's style or his trademark perlocutionary effects. J. E. Bunselmeyer,
for example, uses speech act theory to account in part for the evaluative
stance we feel Faulkner taking in what Bunselmeyer calls the "contemplative"
25
stretches of his prose.
Close reading of texts and stylistic analyses are certainly legitimate
concerns and practices in composition classes. But when our students'
essays come in, few of us recognize a Faulkner or a Bc:ckett. Can speech
act theory help us and our students with their work? Several theorists
have suggested that it can. Martin Steinmann, Jr., for example, points
to the distinction which speech act theory draws between illocutionary
effectiveness and perlocutionary effectiveness, and claims that this
distinction may help writers solve the related but not identical problems
26
of communicating a message and producing the desired effect. Noting
that complexity and confusion in prose tend to lessen its illocutionary
effectiveness, Steinmann speculates, "Perhaps topic sentences, transitions,
certain patterns of paragraph or overall organization, definitions,
examples, analogies, and so on make /xtended speechi7acts easier to
process. In any case, advice to speakers or writers to use such devices
to achieve coherence or unity is based upon. the assumption that they make
acts more effective illocutionarily." Steinmann admits that we know much
less about perlocutionary effectiveness, since this factor is subject to
21
theory
so many variables; nonetheless, it could be argued that speech act
has done us some service simply by demonstrating that illocutionary and
perlocutionary effectiveness are different goals. The recognition that
one can be clear without being convincing is surely a first step toward
writing more persuasively.
Steinmann is not hLre directly concerned with composition teaching,
but Winifred Horner, who is, also advocates incorporation of practices and
precepts derived from speech act theory. In a recent article, Horner
points out that the speech act our students perform in producing expository
themes usually differs fundamentally from the act we would like them to
27 The difference is to be found
perform: that of asserting or affirming.
in appropriateness conditions. According to Searle, one of the
preparatory conditions for the successful performance of an act of asserting
is that "It is not obvious to both S[peakeri and Hfeareri that Hbaref7 knows
7
(does not need to be reminded of, etc.) p/opositional content/" (Speech
Acts, p. In the case of many student essays and most responses to
because the student
essay exam questions, this condition does not hold,
realizes that the teacher already knows what he has to say and only wants
to'know if he knows it. The peculiarity of this situation in which the
asserting
student less performs than imitates the illocutionary act of
vitiates its persuasiveness and substitutes the perlocutionary purpose of
earning an "A." As ways out-of this dilemma, Horner, suggests requiring
the student to write for a clearly defined audience, perhaps fellow
students or even a single, sharply visualized reader other than the
with a
teacher. This, she says, will provide for the student an audience
need to know. She also advises hiving students choose subjects about
which they know more than their teachers. None of these solutions
guarantees that the deadly act of "theme-ing" will disappear from the
student's speech act repertoire, and Horner sees difficulties in
implementing each. Nonetheless, she argues, both students and teachers
need to understand that the illocutionary force of "theme-ing" is
artificial.
Of course, many composition teachers are already using the strategies
Horner advocates, and have not needed speech act theory to validate them.
More novel uses of the theory are suggested in another, oft-reprinted
piece by Richard Ohmann.28 Here Ohmann is taking issue with the hallowed
dictum that adding concrete details makes for better writing. Ohmann
contends, rather, that adding details may not alter quality so much as
meaning. In speech act terms, we could say that these procedures change
effect.
an utterance's illocutionary force and perlocutionary
In evidence, Ohmann adduces two textbook examples, the first labeled
Here they are:
"weak" by the authors and the second "much better."
Abstract (weak)
The telephone is a great scientific achievement, but it
can also be a great inconvenience. Who could begin to
count the number of times that phone calls have come
from unwelcome people or on unwelcome occasions?
Telephones make me nervous.
. . . More Specific (much better)
The telephone is a great scientific achievement, but it
can also be a great big headache. More often than not,
that cheery ringing in my ear brings messages from the
Ace Bill Collecting Agency, my mother (who is feeling
23
23
snubbed for the fourth time that week), salesmen of
encyclopedias and magazines, solicitors for the
Policemen's Ball and Disease of the Month Foundation,
and neighbors complaining about my dog. That's not to
mention frequent wrong numbers -- usually for someone
named "Arnie." The calls always seem to come at the
worst times, too. They've interrupted steak dinners,
hot tubs, Friday night parties, and Saturday morning
sleep-ins. There's no escape. Sometimes I wonder if
29
there are any telephones in padded cells.
The most obvious change in passage two is that lists of specific inter-
rupting people and the times they interrupt have replaced the passage one
generalizations: "unwelcome people . . on unwelcome occasions." In
addition, sensory details have been included in the rewrite, for example,
"headache" for the earlier "inconvenience" and "cheery ringing in my ear."
But, says Ohmann, both these sorts of changes serve to shift the writer's
emphasis from social to personal. Whereas the first passage, vague as it
is, establishes a concern with the telephone as part of a shared soclo-
,
historical nexus, the r.-ision is interested only in the author's own
experience with this instrument. In speech act theory terminology, we
might say that the illocutionary force has changed from that of acts which
make statements requiring evidence to that of acts whose propositional
content need be vouched for only by the speaker. Although the larger
illocutionary intent of both passages is verdictive ,(that is, it assesses
or evaluates), in the second version expressives have replaced
representatives. This substitution greatly reduces risk, but at the cost
24
of a corresponding and probably unintended shift in perlocutionary effect.
As Ohmann puts it, the narrowed "scope accords well with the impression
given by the rewrite of a person incapable of coping with events,
victimized by others, fragmented, distracted -- a kind of likable schlemiel.
He or she may be a less 'boring' writer, but also a less venturesome and
more isolat^d person, the sort who chatters on in a harmless gossipy way
without much purpose or consequence
30
Ohmann does not praise the first passage. But while admitting that
it begs for development, he would direct that development toward further
exploration of abstractions. He suggests investigation of the paradox of
scientific "achievemen-s" which end by infringing on, even imperiling our
lives, or the hierarchial social and financial structure revealed when one
asks for whom the telephone is inconvenient and for whom it is a tool of
4:4
power and control. The mere amassing of detail, without attention to the
illocutionary force and perlocutionary effect which those details will
have, amounts here to what Ohmann calls "a strategy for, sacrificing thought.
31
to feckless merriment."
Like Ohmann, I find it useful to have the terms of speech act theory
on hand as I attempt to help students grasp such amorphous notions as tone,
style, telling detail, support of thesis, and rhetorical effectiveness.
The theory can be especially useful in approaching expressive essays, which
do not usually have a thesis per se, but which must have a clnar, con-
sistent, and unified effect upon their reader.
In "A Linguist's View of the Composing Process," James Stalker cites
this sample freshman essay, written.in response to the assignment to
32
narrate "My Most Frightening Experience":
-25--
SNOW SHJE HUNTING
(1) January 4, 1968, today is when my friends Neil,
Duane and I are going up to Grayling, Michigan, hunting
snowshoe rabbits. (2) The day was like any common winter
day in Michigan. (3) Cruising down the freeway we noticed
a fine mist collecting on the front windshield. (4) The
radio was playing some of the golden top hits. (5) Suddenly
the warning light came on, indicating that the car was over
heating. (6) I pulled into 'the first gas station. (7) The
trouble was in the automatic transmission, throwing out
fluid onto the front windshield. (8) We found at keeping
the speed to 50 mph that the'fluid level and heat guage
L'emained constant.
(9) Several hours later we reached Grayling. (10) Snowing
quite hard we found a lane to pull into. (11) After s:ouLilig
around we discovered an abandoned cellar. (12) This we
utilized as a shelter.
(13) Two days of bitter cold and deep snow no luck
in hunting, we were ready to head back. (14) However it had
rained and froze on, during the night.
(15) With a heavy loaded car we proceeded to make our
long journey home. (16) The roads were a solid transparent
glass coloring. (17) The only possible way to, drive was with
two wheels on the shoulder.
(18) We were doing fine until a steep decline. (19) Going,
(20) Midway was a curve.
as slow as I could we started down.
26
(21) The car went sliding out of control. (22) All that
was visible were trees from the other side. (23) Knowing
that any moment we would crash. (24) Acti%,:s, out of mere
reflex I hit the power brakes. (25) Anyone knows that this
is exactly what you don't want to do in an ice-skid. (26)
However we proved statistics wrong, for this time the rear
wheels with power brakes caught on the shoulder, of the other
side of the road.
(27) With this hair raising experienCe passed. (28)
We had a fairly safe trip home, except for witnessing an
one car skid off from 1-75 S.
(29) Talking to an older friend about our Snow Shoe
hunting trip, I learned that their had been an epidemic which
had made the Snow Shoe rabbit almost extinct in the Grayling
area.
Stal r notes that one of the theme's major problems is uncertainty about
s audience. The short paragraphs and use of a date in the opening
sentence suggest that the student is writing for newspaper readers. But
"decline"
from his incorporation of formal diction ("utilized" for "used,"
for "hill") and the many participial phrases and clauses, we might infer
an attempt to impress an English teacher. A third audience seems to be
on more intimate terms with the writer such intimate terms, in fact, that
they will know who Neil and Duane are and accept the occasional conversational
informality and sentence fragments. Because the hearers to whom these speech
acts are addressed are protean, perlocutionary problems arise.
the
These arc compounded when we consider that the assignment asked
To fulfill the
student to narrate his most-frightening experience.
t 27
assignment, he should have concentrated on the perlocutionary purpose of
arousing apprehension and excitement in the reader. Instead, he loses his
chance for perlocutionary effectivenes.; through a long-winded and only
tangentially related introduction to the crucial scene, the brief and
almost dead-pan narration of the scene itself, and a conclusion which
encourages belief that the essay's overriding illocutionary force is
irony: the irony of there being no rabbits to hunt in the first place.
Perlocutionary effectiveness suffers further from the fact that the essay's
title implies an illocutionary intent of asserting facts about something,
4
but is ambiguous even in this implication. Will the writer discuss hunting
on snowshoes or hunting snow shoe rabbits? Actually neither illocutionary
promise is kept. The essay contains neither snow shoes nor rabbits, and its
real force is supposed to reside in a careening car on an 'Icy hill. What
Ann Berthoff calls the "supergloss," a concept which. incorporates those of
thesis and overall effect, must bind a successful extended illocutionary
33
act into a cohesive whole. This writer cannot perform a felicitous
speech act without first deciding what it is.
What of the essay's grammatical and usage errors, such ad its
sentence fragments (23, 27), dangling modifier (10), missing syntax (7, 18),
and the use of "their" for "there" (29)? Speech act theory recognizes
these as failures to produce propositional content which both refers and
predicates or, alternatively, as failures to observe the felicity condition
stipulating that a speech act be executed correc'Zly and completely. But
if we want our students to stop producing, such misconstructions, it is
These,
far more important that they see the consequences or rule breaking.
too, the theory can elucidate. Speech acts are rule-governed behaviors.
28
Breaking rules makes acts infelicitous. Infelicitous acts are unlikely
to be taken up, let alone produce the desired perlocutionary effect. More
simply put, errors even at the level of spelling interfere with communication.
They put language out of action.
.:."ome of the foregoing observations are Stalker's; some are mine. }or
Stalker attacks thz essay's problems in cohesion, emphasis, and usage
through methods provided by text analysis and transformational grammar. My
point is that he needn't have. The arsenal of speech act theory houses
most of the weapons we need.
I am at present testing this bold hypothesis by using speech act theory
as the conceptual base for my freshman composition classes. These classes
begin with a week's introduction to the theory, as part of which students
are asked to transcribe a few minutes of sample speech acts, produced either
by a single speaker or by two or more in conversation. The communicative
context for these acts may be a classroom, dormitory corridor, news
broadcast, soap opera, TV commercial, family dinner table, sorority or
club meecing, in short, anywhere students hear speech acts. I insist that
the recorded acts be spoken rather than written to insure greater va...iety
in the samplings; after all, while written speech acts vary enormously in
illocutionary force, those students woulS.see are predominantly .
representatives. I have also assumed that the notion of speech as action
would be less foreign than that of writing as action, and that by securing
the uptake of the former concept I could encourage carryover to the latter.
These sample speech acts are analyzed for type, illocutionary force,
felicity, likelihood of uptake, and perlocutionary effect, both intended
and actual. After a random sampling of the samples is discussed in class,
2J
29
dimensions of their own
students write up their findings regarding these
transcriptions. Write-ups are discussed with me in conference so.that
misconceptions and confusions can be minimized.
The exercise has yielded some useful concepts about how language
asking her,
operates. One student's transcription began with her roommate
'"What are you doing tonight?" Whiie this looked to have the simple
illocutionary force of requesting information, as it turned out, the
Her roommate
question also marked an attempt to manipulate the student.
promised them the
had invited two boys over for the evening and had
student's company as well as hers. Thus her question was the opening
to spend the evening
gambit in a campaign to change the student's plans
this insight into
studying. An analysis of illocutionary force produced
strategic uses of language.
organic object for
A later assignment asks students to observe an
the object each day, and
five successive days, write for ten minutes on
description of the object.
then use those journal entries to produce a
single, extended speech
I advise them to think of this description as a
corresponding
act with one overriding illocutionary force and a
perlocutionary effect. When students follow this advice, they produce
with clinical detail and
descriptions which do not, for example, begin
about learning to love my friend the peapcd.
end in vague emotionalism
In one successful
Rather, they aim for a unified impact on the reader.
of trying to keep a
description, an analogy was drawn between the process
in a nursing home with an
fading rm-e alive and the student's experience
elderly, dying patient. Another good description, this one of an apple,
the student had noticed, while
was organized around a series of contrasts
30
1
still another 1:nked the removal of fruit from a tree to her own removal
from her family home to college. With a single perlocutionary purpose
firmly in mind, these students pruned and shaped their material to produce
the desired effect.
Like many writing teachers, I put students' essays through the
process of peer group evaluation and here, too, the theory has proved
valuable. Student: no longer respo^d with broad generalities to each
other's work. Instead, they consider and record for me the overall
illocutionary force, intended perlocutionary effect,and strategies for
promoting uptake of each essay, their own and those of others in their
group.
In general, I have used the theory as a heuristic for helping
students understand how language does its job and to bring clarity into
formerly hazy precinct:_ of theory and practice. Instead of style and
tone, I can talk about hors illocutionary i rce suits propositional content.
Where once I urged students to formulate a thesis and to meet their
audience's needs, I can now speak of promoting uptake and maximizing
perlocutionary effect.
Does all this merely represent the substitution of one complex jargon
for another? Of course. But speech act theory jargon has several
advantages over the traditional. First it is new and therefore potentially
exciting. 'Its newness also means that every student has an equal chance
it. No student need feel that because he failed to understand a term
presented in high"school or junior high, that notion is forever
Secondly, jargon id fun. Have you noticed the glee with
indecipherable.
"semiotic"
which beginning graduate students in English spout terms like
31
31
and "deconstruction"? First year medical students get a similar kick out of
"osteomyelitis" and "teratogenic." Use of jargon creates an in-group of the
informed, surely a comfortable place for anyone to be, especially a shaky
student writer. A final advantage is that speech act theory terms can be
clearly defined and demonstrated in ways the student uncle 413 I have
never found this the case with terms like "style," "tone," and 'Lhesis."
W. Ross Winterowd has said that "speech act theory begins to systematize
34
the exploration of the rhetorical transaction between speaker and hearer."
In so doing, it makes this transaction more intelligible and, therefore
more teachable.
I am far from hailing speech act theory as a panacea for all the woes
of taking or teaching composition classes. For example, it will not do
much to promote what the sentence-combiners call "syntactic fluency,"
although it can speak to the effects of that fluency or its lack. Complex
sentences which subordinate or have embedded appositives will bear a more
evaluative illocutionary force than will a parataxic string of simp's
sentences. But speech act theory can't show students how to subordinate
or use appositives, any more than it can show them how to avoid sentence
fragments and comma splices. Again, it is limited to pointing out what
happens when they splice and fragment.
Nor does the theory have a patent on the concerns we've been discuss
ing. 'Among complementary or related approaches are Burke's dramatistic
35
pentad of act, actor/agent, scene, agency, and purpose; Pike's tagmemic
heuristic which allows us to place the same thing or concept in the
contexts in its own unique features, its changes over time, or its place
36
in a broader scheme; James Kinneavy's emphasis on the centrality of
32
32
37 and the interest deriving from Malinowski and
purpose in discourse;
Firth in the shaping of meaning by situational and cultural context.
3e
Also of interest to practitioners of speech act theory would be Halliday
and Hasan's attention to situational context or "register," as well as
their influential definition of a text as "a continuum of meaning-in-context,
constructed around the semantic relation of cohesion."39 The list of
additional recommended reading could be extended almost indefinitely.
Thus I should not be construed as claiming that the speech act theorists
have cornered any markets.
A final necessary caveat is an admission that the data isn't in yet.
Assumptions and techniques like the ones Ohmann, Stalker, and I are
advocating a're only now being tested in the trenches. Yet even my own
experience steels me to keep trying. To return to the story which prefacid
these remarks, it may be that speech act theory can coax our students out
of the closed car of writing apprehension and performance impotence into
the open air of communicative competence.. Can we, as writing teachers,
afford to ignore that possibility?
33
Notes
1
Robert Zoellner, "Talk-Write: A Behavioral Pedagogy for Composition,"
College English, 30 (1969), 273.
2
W. Ross Winterowd, "Linguistics and Composition," in Teaching
Composition: Ten Bibliographical Essays, ed. Gray Tate (Fort Worth: Texas
Christian University Press, 1976), p. 217; W. Ross Winterowd, Contemporary
Rhetoric: A Conceptual Background with Readings (New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1975), p. 18; and Dan I. Slobin, Psycholinguistics
(Glenview, Ill.: Scott, Foresman, 1971).
3
Winterowd, "Linguistics and Composition," D. 217.
4
Zoellner, p. 307.
5
James L. Collins, "Spoken Language and the Development of Writing
Abilities, ", A paper presented at the Conference on College Composition and
Communication, Dallas, Texas, March 27, 1981, ERIC ED 199729.
6
John C. Shafer, "The Linguistic Analysis of Spoken and Written Texts,"
in Exploring Speaking-Writing Relationships: Connections and Contrasts,
eds. Barry M. Kroll and Roberta J. Vann (Urbana, Ill.: NCTE, 1981),
-pp. 1-31.
7
Shafer, p. 3t.
8
See Richard. Ohmann, "Speech, Action, and Style," in Literary Style:
A Symposium; ed. and trans. Seymour Chatman (London: ,Oxford University
Press, 1971), p. 259.
34
34
well Hymes, "Competence and Performance in Linguistic Theory,"
in Language Acquisition: Models and Methods, eds. R. Huxley and E. Ingram
(New York: Academic Press, 1971).
10 My discussion of speech act theory depends largely on the following
sources: J. L. Austin, How to Do Things with Wcrds, Second Edition
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1975); John R. Searle, Speech Acts:
An Essay in the Philosophy of Language (London: Cambridge University
Press, 1969); John R. Searle, "A Classifiation of Illocutionary Acts,"
Language in Scoiety, 5 (1976), 1-23; and Elizabeth Closs Traugott and
Mary Louise Pratt, L:..guistics for Students of Literature (New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1980). Further citations 'to these references
will be made parenthetically.
11
H. P. Grice, "Meaning," in Readings in the Philosophy of Language,
eds. J. Rosenberg and C. Travis (Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall,
1971),- p. 442. Rpt. from The Philosophical Review, 3 (1957), 377-88.
12 Martin Steinmann, Jr., "Speech Acts and Rhetoric," in Rhetoric and
Change, eds. William E. Tanner and J. Dean Bishop (Mesquite, Tex.
Ide House, 1982), pp. 96-97.
13
See Roger W. Brown and Marguerite Ford, "Address in American English,"
Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 62 (1961), 375-85.
14
See John R. Searle, "Indirect. Speech Acts," in Syntax and Semantics,
Vol. III, Speech Acts, eds. Peter Cole and Jerry L. Morgan (New York:
Academic Press, 1975), pp. 59-60; Herbert H. Clark and Eve Clark, Psychology
An Introduction to Psycholinguistics(New York: Harcourt
and Language:
Brace Jovanovich, 1977), p. 29; Kent Bach and Robert M. Harnish, Linguistic
ir
35
Communication and Speech Acts (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1979), Chapt. 9;
and Johan Vander Auwera, Indirect Speech Acts Revisited (Bloomington:
Indiana University Linguistics Club, 1980).
15
H. P. Grice, "Logic and Conversation," in Syntax and Semantics,
Vol. III, Speech Acts, pp. 41-58.
16
Ohmann, "Speech, Action, and Style," p. 247.
17 Edward P. J. Corbett, "Approaches to the Study of Style," in
Teaching Composition: Ten Bibliographical Essays, p. 92.
18 Mary Louise Pratt, Toward a Speech Act Theory of Literary Discourse
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1977).
19Modern Language Notes, 91 (1976), 983-1025.
2
Ohmann, "Speech, Action, and Style," pp. 441-59.
21 Samuel. Beckett, Watt (New fork: Grove Press, 1959), p. 102.
22 Ohmann, "Speech, Action, and Style," p. 247.
23
See Fish, p. 1008.
24 Ohmann, "Speech, Action, and Style," p. 242.
25"Faulkner's Narrative Styles," American Literature, 53 (1981),
424-42.
26 See Steinmann's "Speech Acts and Rhetoric," p. 99-100.
27 'Theme-in in
Winifred B. Horner, "Speech-Act and Text-Act Theory:
Freshman Composition," CCC, 30 (1979), 165-69.
28 Definite, Specific, Concrete Language," in The Writing Teacher's
Sourcebook, eds. Gary Tate and. Edward P. J. Corbett (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1981), pp. 379-89.
36
2 9David Skwire and Francs Chitwood, Student's Book of College English
(Glencoe Press, 1978), pp. 348-1-19.
30
Ohmann, "Use Definite, a.Decific, Concrete Language," p. 382.
31
Ohmann, "Use Definite, Specific, Concrete 7,a,ialiage," p. 382.
32
CEA Critic, 40, No. 4 (May 1978), 15-23.
Berthoff, Forming / Thinking / Writing: The Co,-posing
Imaginai n (Montclair, N.J.: Boyton / Cook, 1982), pp. 185-88
34
Winterowd, "Linguistics and Composition," p. 211.
35
See, for example, Burke's pentad as modified and explained in William
Irmscher, Holt Guide to English, Third Edition (New York: Holt, Rinehart
and Winston, 1981), pp. 27-44.
36
See Richard E. Young, Alton L. Becker, and Kenneth L. Pike, Rhetoric:
Discovery and Change (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1970).
37 See James Kinneavy, A Theory of Discourse (Englewood Cliffs, .J.:
Prentice Hall, 1971), p. 2.
38 B. Malinowski, Coral Gardens and Their Magic, Vol. II (London:
George Allen and Unwin, 1935), pp. 18 and 51; and J. R. Firth, "The Tech-
nique of Semantics," in Papers in Linguistics 1934-1951 (1935; rpt.
London: Oxford University Press, 1957).
39 Longman,
M.A.K. Halliday and R. Hasan, Cohesion in English (London:
1976), p. 25; see also Shafer, pp. 17-18.
37